Loenn
John took a moment to look around and decide what Crom was referring to. It had become such a habit that he rarely thought anything of it except when he was missing out. Already, the images of Aldrun had begun to fade away and he worried that he wouldn't be able to create a decent likeness of the port town. "It's embroidery," He said, knowing the far less than masculine association of the word and hoping to have that out of the way early. "I do this to remember people and places, Most of my bag is full of these." He turned over the patch in his hands to show Crom. The forward side, needle still stuck in it with a thin strand of black line following, was covered in a rough, incomplete image of a werewolf, or at least the artist's impression of one. Before he could continue, the scenery changed around them. The cart rolled by the outer watch towers of Loenn, and Marcus waved up at the man in the wooden structure as they went. The gesture was not returned, and they seemed rather on-edge for being posted so close to town.
The wagon began to slow as they passed into the town proper, although they were still clearly hurried compared to the calm citizenry of Loenn. Old and worn, but dignified cobblestone roads saw them between neatly arranged rows of single story wooden buildings, steep roofed and clay shingled to keep the winter snows off. The hooded woman may have said she didn't know Loenn but her hired driver seemed to understand the streets well enough, and in no time they were stopped near an inn overlooking the town square, still crowded by merchants. Children played out in the roads, merchants and buyers haggled loudly in the open air, and a lone inn patron sat outside the building nursing a cup of tea and watching the scene unfold. It wasn't a very busy place. The hooded woman stood up and stretched her arms wide. "Rooms're paid tell him you're with Meredith," she said briskly, walking across the uneven load of crates and abandoning her usual speaking voice as she put negotiations behind her. She tapped one of the caravan sentries on the shoulder as she descended from the back of the wagon. The man, clean shaven but with a hard, blocky face that made him seem every bit hired thug that he was moved over towards Crom. He produced a bag from under his cloak protruding cutting instruments and gauze rolls, only one of which would actually be needed hopefully. "If you would come inside with me, sir," he implored with a slight bow, in a voice incongruously soft.
John nodded towards Crom, as if he were some authority on whether or not to trust their only viable doctor, and looked over at Griff. "Might be just us for a while," he said, shrugging. Company was nice, not something he was used to having that was for sure. The patch and needle went back into his bag and he stood up, taking the time to get a good look at the town. The roads were broad, strange for a place old enough to have sprung up around a fort, but it made for easier walking when things weren't continuously shoulder to shoulder. Every roof in the place seemed to be the same level, though, which made landmarks few and far between from within the town. Not very inspiring tourism prospects, but they had a day to make of it. "I'm not quite given to lounging and fraternizing but I suppose anything beats sitting on these crates all day. Either of you two have any ideas on what to do here?"
Lieda
The seat of of an empire, Lieda looked every bit the part. Large whitewashed stone shipyards dominated the coastline, wooden cranes and steel skeletons used for shipbuilding spanning endlessly. Inland, box buildings crafted predominantly in red bricks rose into the air and were arrayed around asphalt city roads, positively bustling with foot traffic and the occasional dark blue fatigues of an Arcarti constable. Above the clock towers decorating the town rose Keep Lieda, a modest and ancient squarish looking castle of grayed, deeply scarred stone lovingly repainted and plastered where possible. The air hung heavy in Lieda, humid from the sea and the sporadic marshes surrounding the city. The other thing Lieda, and most of the country had come to be known for was the nearly constant overbearing presence of dark, gray clouds bearing a threatening quantity of water that nature was content to mete out in a constant, slow drizzle that phased into utter downpours several times a day, it seemed.
The rain was light for the moment, as the uniform clad crew of a small military clipper pulled the vessel, boldly emblazoned Mackerel across its bow, into port and made it fast to the dock. The Mackerel's sails were run up with a haste only appropriate for when someone was around that needed to be shown off to. Ropes were run out and secured, and finally the gangplank was deployed with an ear rattling clatter of wood on stone as the hefty wooden assembly came down precisely within the finely painted guidelines of the military pier. Three men stood the pier already, individuals dressed in simple yet stately uniforms devoid of marking, and the current improvised guardians and guides for the diplomat they had been told would be coming aboard the Mackerel. Beside Milo, who stood at the head of the reception party, one of the two soldiers remarked dryly about their wet situation. "Well they sure did us a favor coming down from Erschald. The rain can get lighter here." Sea spray suddenly kicking up the side of the pier enunciated his point. The winds were starting up now, and it wouldn't be long before a downpour began.